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Anderson Valley Advertiser

Ida Four

Two hours into tonight’s Open Mike at Club Muse, a dumpy old pub on San Pablo Avenue in Richmond California, most of the eighty-seven patrons have ceased to pay attention to the performers—the music awful,…

Sleeping & Waking

When some years ago I read a piece by Ernest Hemingway called Now I Lay Me, I thought there was nothing further to be said about insomnia. I see now that that was because I had never had much; it appears that every man’s insomnia is as different from his neighbor’s as are their daytime hopes and aspirations.

Deputy Orell Massey Interviewed by Barry Vogel

I have been in the county almost 20 years now. It has probably been the most challenging 20 years of my life. It's been very difficult at times and really tested every character trait and every emotion that I could probably come up with and more — being in this county and coming into contact with the people who live here.

Mendocino County Today: Thursday, Sep 3, 2015

Elk Fire;
Woodhouse Memo;
Barton Guilty;
Proud Granddaughter;
Train Enthusiasm;
School Food;
FB Police PR;
Warrant Wednesday;
Yesterday's Catch;
El Nino;
Glass Beach;
128 Closures;
Insurance-less;
Secret Service;
Doomstead;
Big Snake;
Climate Conference;
Olive Tree;
Net Metering;
Wine Industry;
Going Medieval

Going Dry Fast (Part 1)

Roughly 1,000 rural Sonoma County residents overflowed classrooms and small meeting chambers at five informational sessions convened by the State Water Resources Control Board. It would be hard to exaggerate many attendees' outrage. At one meeting, two men got in a fistfight over whether to be “respectful” to the state and federal officials on hand.

Letters (Sep 2, 2015)

The Mendocino Air Quality Control Board made a terrible mistake on Aug. 28 when it rejected the Friends of Outlet Creek’s appeal of the Air Board’s decision to allow the Grist Creek Aggregates to open an asphalt plant in Longvale  — without at full CEQA review and a new environmental impact report. As a consequence, Grist Creek will now begin to produce hundreds of thousands of tons of asphalt annually — a few feet from Outlet Creek.

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